Chapter 9.D Services Trade Data

Chapter 9.D Services Trade Data Nico van Leeuwen and Robert A. McDougall 9.D.1 Introduction This chapter documents the contribution to the GTAP Data...
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Chapter 9.D Services Trade Data Nico van Leeuwen and Robert A. McDougall 9.D.1

Introduction

This chapter documents the contribution to the GTAP Data Base 9. Starting with GTAP 7, the quality of the services data reported is determined with reliability indices developed by Gehlhar (1996). Prior to GTAP Data Base 7, total imports and exports of services are collected from the International Monetary Fund balance of payments statistics data. The bilateral trade matrix and rebalancing was constructed using amongst others a RAS procedure and bilateral trade flows in goods. 1 These bilateral data are thus constructed and it would be desirable to obtain a statistical base for constructing the bilateral flows. In the past, statistical databases focusing on services were lacking, but this seems to be changing now. Good statistical measurement of services trade is becoming more and more important now that trade in services is getting the attention of policymakers. In 1995 many countries decided to liberalise services trade according to the General Agreement for Trade in Services (GATS). At the request of GATS and UNCTAD, the Interagency Task Force on Statistics of International Trade in Services (TFSITS) was established. The objectives of the Task Force are to elaborate the statistical requirements of the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). A Manual on Statistics of International Trade in Services (MSITS) was published in 2002 and the revised version, the MSITS 2010 was adopted by the UN Statistical Commission at its 41st session in 2010 and published in 2011. The Task Force is convened by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), and consists of Eurostat, International Monetary Fund (IMF), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD), the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) and the World Trade Organization (WTO). The main methodological references used for the production of statistics on international trade in services are the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s fifth balance of payments manual (BPM5) and the United Nations’ manual on statistics of international trade in services. In section 2 we present an overview of the available Bilateral Services Trade. As outlined in Van Leeuwen and Lejour, 2006 we use the method of Gehlhar (1996) to check the reliability of

1

For more information, please refer to Chapter 15 of GTAP Data Base 6 documentation (Dimaranan, 2006).

the reporting country for the cases were two observations available for the same bilateral flow. This is described in section 3.

9.D.2

Data sources

Bilateral services trade data are collected from two sources, the UN Service Trade website and EUROSTAT’s International trade in services. This results in matrices for exports and imports information by reporting country for 45 countries (see Appendix Table 9.D.A.1) and sector classification of Table 9.D.2.1. Table 9.D.2.1. Sector coverage Code Description TOTAL SERVICES s200 TRANSPORTATION s205 Sea transport s206 Air transport s210 Other transport s214 TRAVEL s236 COMMUNICATION SERVICES s245 CONSTRUCTION SERVICES s249 INSURANCE SERVICES s253 FINANCIAL SERVICES s260 COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SERVICES s262 ROYALTIES AND LICENSE FEES s266 OTHER BUSINESS SERVICES s268 PERSONAL, CULTURAL AND RECREATIONAL SERVICES s287 GOVERNMENT SERVICES, N.I.E. s291 OTHER COMMERCIAL SERVICES total minus 205 (transport) and 236 (travel) s981

9.D.3

The Gehlhar Method for Establishing Reliability

Gehlhar (1996) has developed a method for reconciling bilateral merchandise trade data for the GTAP Data Base. This methodology is needed when there is discrepancy between the data reported by trading partners. According to this methodology, transaction data are reliable if the values of the reporting countries deviate less than 20%. An arbitrary reporting exporter trades with dozens of countries in a particular good. Some of the transactions are reliable according to the definition above and some are not. By aggregating the values of the reliable transactions of the reporters and comparing the aggregate to total reported exports for that particular good Gehlhar constructs reliability indices of the exporters. This is done for every reporting exporting and importing country per good item. The higher the index, the larger the share of reliable transactions, and the more reliable the reporter is. If the index for the reporting exporter is higher than for the reporting importer, the reported trade flow from the exporter is considered to be the most reliable.

We use the same method to identify the most reliable reporters for all available services sectors. 2 We also use the criterion of 20% as indication for a reliably reported flow. This threshold is arbitrary. In first instance, we experimented with a lower number because some biases in reporting that occur in merchandise trade are not (or less) relevant in services trade, such as the classification of trade and transportation costs. However in that case only a few flows were considered to be reliable. If there is only one flow, this flow is considered to be the correct flow. For all other cases, we have estimated bilateral services trade flows.

9.D.4

Reconciliation with Other Inputs

We reconcile the bilateral services trade data set so obtained, with a data set on services trade exports and imports, derived from the International Monetary Fund’s Balance of Payments Statistics, processed as described in McDougall and Hagemejer (2006). These data have more complete country coverage, and a more detailed services classification, but lack a partner dimension. We proceed as follows: 1. From the services exports and imports data set, construct bilateral trade matrices by prorating. 2. For each matrix from step 1, extract the submatrix of trade between countries covered in the bilateral services trade data set, and calculate row and column totals, that is, total exports to and imports from each covered country to each covered partner. 3. Against those row and column totals, balance the matrix for the corresponding service in the bilateral services trade data set. 4. With that balanced matrix, replace the corresponding submatrix in the pro-rata matrix from step 1. We obtain thus a trade data set in which total exports and imports are as in the services exports and imports data set, and flows between countries not both covered in the bilateral services trade data set are constructed by pro-rating, but flows between countries covered in the bilateral trade data set reflect its bilateral trade patterns.

References Dimaranan, B.V. (editor), 2006, Global Trade, Assistance, and Production: The GTAP 6 Data Base, Center for Global Trade Analysis, Purdue University. European Commission, 2004, Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on Services in the Internal Market, SEC (2004) 21, Brussels. Gehlhar, M.J., 1996, Reconciling Bilateral Trade data for Use in GTAP, GTAP Technical Paper No. 10. McDougall, R.A. and J. Hagemejer, 2006, Services Trade Data, Chapter 15.E in Dimaranan (2006). Van Leeuwen, N.I.M. and A.M. Lejour, 2006, Bilateral services Trade Data and the GTAP Data Base, CPB Memorandum 160.

2

We agreed to use this method after discussions in the GTAP Advisory Board. Lejour et al. (2008) discuss briefly more advanced statistical methods to determine the reliability of a reporter.

Appendix A: List of Available Countries Table 9.D.A.1: List of available countries as reporters AUS

Australia

NZL

New Zealand

CHN

China

HKG

Hong Kong

JPN

Japan

KOR

Korea

SGP

Singapore

IND

India

CAN

Canada

USA

United States

MEX

Mexico

BRA

Brazil

AUT

Austria

BEL

Belgium

CYP

Cyprus

CZE

Czech Republic

DNK

Denmark

EST

Estonia

FIN

Finland

FRA

France

DEU

Germany

GRC

Greece

HUN

Hungary

IRL

Ireland

ITA

Italy

LVA

Latvia

LTU

Lithuania

LUX

Luxembourg

MLT

Malta

NLD

Netherlands

POL

Poland

PRT

Portugal

SVK

Slovakia

SVN

Slovenia

ESP

Spain

SWE

Sweden

GBR

United Kingdom

CHE

Switzerland

NOR

Norway

BGR

Bulgaria

HRV

Croatia

ROU

Romania

RUS

Russian Federation

TUR

Turkey

ZAF

South Africa

Table 9.D.A.2: Concordance between services sectors and GTAP’s services sectors

Code Description

GTAP code

GTAP description

FINANCIAL SERVICES

wtp atp otp trd cmn cns isr ofi

Water transport Air transport Transport nec Trade Communication Construction Insurance Financial services nec

COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SERVICES

obs

Business services nec

ROYALTIES AND LICENSE FEES OTHER BUSINESS SERVICES

obs obs

Business services nec Business services nec

s287

PERSONAL, CULTURAL AND RECREATIONAL SERVICES

ros

Recreational and other services

s291

GOVERNMENT SERVICES, N.I.E.

osg

Public Administration, Defense, Education, Health

s981

OTHER COMMERCIAL SERVICES total minus 205 (transport) and 236 (travel)

obs

Business services nec

s200 s205 s206 s210 s214 s236 s245 s249 s253 s260 s262 s266 s268

TOTAL SERVICES TRANSPORTATION Sea transport Air transport Other transport TRAVEL COMMUNICATION SERVICES CONSTRUCTION SERVICES INSURANCE SERVICES